Citations:ozone


 * 1850 "The Edinburgh new philosophical journal": Volume 49
 * Chemists are not yet fully agreed concerning the nature or production of this singular substance, ozone.
 * 1948 "Popular Science" May 1948
 * Fifty ozone generators resembling fire-tube boilers, each one containing 85 four-foot electric glow discharge tubes operating at 15000 volts, will manufacture a total of 1250 pounds of ozone a day.
 * 1960 H.J. Emeleus, A.G. Sharpe, "Advances in Inorganic Chemistry": Volume 2
 * The largest molecule of oxygen is triatomic ozone, but selenium and tellurium form longer chains in the elemental state, like sulfur.
 * 1980 "Popular Science" May 1980
 * Fluorocarbons were banned in April 1979, after tests showed that they threatened the delicate ozone layer protecting the Earth from damaging ultraviolet rays.


 * 1998 G.R. Chhatwal, "Encyclopedia of Environmental Management"
 * There were other widely held views about the beneficial effects of ozone, which was believed to reinforce the bracing properties of the air in seaside resorts. In fact ozone levels are not higher there than elsewhere ...
 * 2004 Stephan Harrison, Steve Pile, N. J. Thrift, "Patterned ground: entanglements of nature and culture"
 * But before that, they can smell it. That curious mix of ozone, decaying seaweed and salt will be familiar to anyone who has been to a British beach; do other beaches smell the same?
 * 2007 Paul Richardson, "A late dinner: discovering the food of Spain"
 * But down at the seaside, change, like the invigorating scent of salt and ozone, was in the air.